Search This Blog

Showing posts with label Jared Kushner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jared Kushner. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 4, 2017

Names to Know: Most to Least Concerning Trump Advisors

Names to Know:

Most to Least Concerning Trump Advisors

by Whitney Ahn



Steve Bannon: Senior Counselor, Chief Strategist
        He was the editor of Breitbart, which ran articles and pieces that were racist, sexist, homophobic, and everything else. Regardless of your opinion on "PC culture", Breitbart is and was the basis of the case in its favor.

Stephen A. Miller: Senior Advisor
         He is extremist at best, and an insane and sociopathic Russophile at worst. His influence over the President is strong, as shown throughout the Trump campaign, which is what makes him so dangerous.

Reince Priebus: Chief of Staff
         Priebus is not crazy, but is so inexperienced that his occupation of this important position becomes to entire administration's detriment.

Kellyanne Conway: Counselor
         She's really more of a PR expert than a policy advisor, and has shown signs of multipolarity with regards to her general sanity. Her loyalty to President Trump is undying, but several outlets

K.T. McFarland: Deputy National Security Advisor
         She opened the Deputies Committee by limiting everyone to two minutes, because she's "from TV". Beyond that, McFarland is surprisingly qualified, despite having not served since the Reagan administration.

Jared Kushner: Senior Advisor
         He is (probably) not crazy. However, his presence brings up concerns of nepotism and his occupation of an official rule is potentially a breaking of laws that were designed to prevent this sort of thing from happening, though communications officials in the White House have made the argument that fits into a legal loophole.

Ivanka Trump
         She is (probably) not crazy. However, her presence, like Kushner's, brings up concerns of nepotism. The difference between her and her husband is that she does not hold any official position.

Dina Powell: Senior Counselor for Economic Initiatives
         She has yet to show any signs of being completely crazy, and has the ear of Ivanka Trump, who is also (probably) not crazy.

H.R. McMaster: National Security Advisor
         He's definitely not crazy. So there's that.

Friday, January 20, 2017

Names to Know: Michael Flynn, Jared Kushner, David Friedman, and K.T. McFarland

Names to Know: Michael Flynn, Jared Kushner, David Friedman, and K.T. McFarland

by Whitney Ahn

These are shorter pieces of our Names to Know series, for officials either less prominent or for whom there is less information about.

Mike Flynn
        Former Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn grew up in a blue-collar family of Democrats, and grew up to be every Democrat's worst nightmare. Donald Trump selected him to be his National Security Advisor, the highest-ranking security official in America that doesn't have to be confirmed by the Senate. He co-wrote (though some say his role in authoring it was limited) an interesting and extremely well-publicized paper about American intelligence agencies, saying that they fail to think about cultural context and the lot as much as they should. This paper, and its publicity, lead to his appointment as the director of the DIA, the military equivalent of the better-know civilian agency, the CIA. In 2014, Director Flynn said that the United States is at a greater risk of terrorism than it was before 9/11. Shortly after, mostly in part due to his incredibly troubled reign at the DIA, he was forced to resign. He was essentially laughed out of Washington, and no one ever expected to hear from him again. But becoming one of the few Republican figures willing to work with Trump early on, Flynn gained the now-President's ear and trust, and is now back in D.C. His support for Trump was so fiery that he became a demouge-like figure to the left after his speech at the Republican National Convention, where he shouted that Hillary Clinton should be locked up. After all, he had no positive reputation in Washington to lose, and the power of this endorsement could not be nearly as effective if it were for any other candidate.

Jared Kushner
        Being named as a high-ranking advisor to Donald Trump caused Kushner, his son-in-law, to be the target of a number of questions regarding its legality in relation to nepotism laws. Kushner is best known as a real estate investor and husband of the much more prominent and widely beloved Ivanka Trump. For some reason, possibly because he is Jewish and Mr. Trump has a history of appointing people to jobs they are inexperienced for because their race or religion is perceived as being relevent to issues the job surrounds (see neurosurgeon Ben Carson as Secretary of Housing and Urban Development), Kushner is expected to be working on brokering peace between Israel and Palestine, as opposed to his Secretary of State pick, oil tycoon Rex Tillerson, or Ambassador to Israel, bankruptcy lawyer David Friedman, whose jobs now place this issue directly into their responsibilities. Speaking of...

David Friedman
        David Friedman handled Donald Trump's abnormally large number of bankruptcies and in return, he has been nominated to be the American Ambassador to Israel. Friedman is yet another controversial pick, due to comments he made that compared any Jewish person who is not a conservative to Jews who helped the Nazis in the Holocaust. This obviously angered the more left-leaning, as well as moderate, members of the government. However, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who is widely known as one of the most right-wing heads of state in the world, publicly expressed support for the nominee for the ambassadorship.

K.T. McFarland
        K.T. McFarland is Donald Trump's Deputy National Security Advisor, which is not a Senate-confirmed position, and is notable for being one the few administration officials who undebatably have qualifications that are specific to her job. She received the highest civilian honor possible from the Department of Defense, the Distinguished Civilian Award. She has served in the Kissinger and Reagan administrations, and has commentated on Fox News. She's not considered by some major foreign policy figures such as Kori Schake (a Republican, and former advisor to John McCain), but all the same, she has more experience than the typical Trump nominee.